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A Missing van Gogh Discovered
346,000 artworks
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From left: 'Ravine,' the X-ray of 'Ravine,' and the 'Wild Vegetation' drawing.
From left: Ravine, owned by the MFA; the x-ray of Ravine showing a different painting underneath; and the corresponding Wild Vegetation drawing, owned by the Van Gogh Museum. See larger images below.
Van Gogh Interactive Tour

The MFA and the Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam, have discovered a painting by Vincent van Gogh (1853–1890) underneath the artist’s painting Ravine, owned by the MFA. Meta Chavannes, the MFA’s Andrew W. Mellon Fellow in Paintings Conservation, was examining x-rays of Ravine in response to a request from outside scholars for technical information on the Museum’s six paintings by van Gogh. During this examination, she discovered a second painting below the paint surface. She met with Louis van Tilborgh, the Van Gogh research curator at the Van Gogh Museum, and they established that the underlying composition was most likely painted in June 1889, during the early period of Van Gogh’s stay at the asylum of Saint-Paul de Mausole near the Provençal town of Saint-Rémy, and was re-used as a support for Ravine a few months later, in October 1889. Van Tilborgh related the x-ray of Ravine to a drawing Van Gogh sent his brother in mid-1889 entitled Wild Vegetation. Scholars have suggested that this drawing, in the Van Gogh Museum, forms part of group of around a dozen drawn copies of paintings that the artist sent to his brother Theo in July 1889, but until now, no one knew of a painting upon which this particular drawing could have been based. As a result of this current research, the lost painting has been re-discovered.

Van Gogh did re-use canvas to save money in his earlier career, but in 1888 his brother Theo began to supply and pay for all of his painting materials. Thus, it is unlikely that he re-used the Wild Vegetation canvas to save money when he began to paint Ravine in October 1889. In fact, correspondence with his brother reveals that Theo was late in sending materials during this precise period, and that Vincent had completely run out of canvas by the time he painted Ravine.

Van Gogh’s pen-and-ink copy of his painting of Wild Vegetation can be seen in the presentation of "Van Gogh’s Drawings: New Insights" on view at the Van Gogh Museum through October 7, 2007. Ravine—the masterpiece that now covers the earlier painting—is on view in the MFA’s Impressionist Gallery.

More information about the paintings can be found in:
Meta Chavannes and Louis van Tilborgh, "A missing Van Gogh unveiled," The Burlington Magazine, August 2007, No. 1253, Vol. CXLIX
Vincent van Gogh, 'Ravine,' 1889. Oil on canvas. Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. Bequest of Keith McLeod.
Van Gogh's Ravine.
X-ray of 'Ravine'
X-ray of Ravine, revealing a different painting underneath.
Vincent van Gogh, "Wild Vegetation," 1889. Reed pen, pen, brush and brown ink, on wove paper. Van Gogh Museum.
Wild Vegetation, the drawing that corresponds to the hidden painting.
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